Register      Login
Historical Records of Australian Science Historical Records of Australian Science Society
The history of science, pure and applied, in Australia, New Zealand and the southwest Pacific
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Soil in the air

Libby Robin https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5202-9185 A *
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia.

* Correspondence to: libbydeq@gmail.com

Historical Records of Australian Science 33(2) 110-121 https://doi.org/10.1071/HR21014
Published: 10 June 2022

© 2022 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of the Australian Academy of Science.

Abstract

The post-war era of the 1940s is known for the birth of global governance, a time when Western nations united in efforts to reconstruct the war-torn world and reflected on the role of science in society. History and philosophy of science (HPS) was one of the early projects that emerged out of the war years. Diana (Ding) Dyason who headed the first HPS department in the southern hemisphere is honoured by this annual lecture, the text of which constitutes this article. Thomas Kuhn’s influential lecture in Oxford in 1961 inspired her work on the history of scientific entanglement with social concerns, and the directions of HPS at the University of Melbourne. Post-war reconstruction was both a local and a national project for every nation, very much in the air in the 1940s, and influential until the 1970s. The Australasian Association of Scientific Workers (AASW) brought together scientists too old to serve, or, in reserved occupations, to undertake their own ‘war effort’ on the question of: ‘What comes next?’ AASW held a planning conference in Sydney in 1944 to ‘formulate a policy on the organisation of science necessary to meet the demands of post-war Australia’. They set out to consider the role of the ‘the scientific method’ in the welfare of society. In particular, they recognised their existing international scientific networks and connections could become valuable for post-war collaborations between different sciences and different nations of benefit to Australia and the world. The idea of ‘the environment’ was one of many that emerged internationally in these ‘world-minded’ times, an idea that focused on the management of nature for the benefit of people using the scientific method. National Parks were a crucial discussion point, bringing together amateur naturalists and professional environmental managers of all sorts in discussions about landscape planning along with international comparative work on reserving places for wild animals and plants. This Dyason Lecture explores the emergence of ‘integrated science’, of science in the service of society, that later included natural resource management, big science, environmental science, earth systems science and climate science. It begins with the tragedy of the ‘dirty thirties’, when soil was in the air, and the scientific response to concerns about feeding the world.

Keywords: Dyason lecture, environment, integrated science, local knowledge, scientific workers.


References

Anonymous (1945) Handbook of National Security Legislation Relating to the War Industry Office, Canberra.

Anonymous (1952) Agricultural Production: Aims and Policy, Canberra.

Australian Association of Scientific Workers (NSW) (1945) ‘Conference of scientists on planning of science’ (May 1944), in Scientists: ephemera material collected by the National Library of Australia’, National Library of Australia, Canberra.

Bankes, A. W. (1944) Food to finish the job, Food Front, 1, 3.

Berry, W. (2021). What I Stand for Is What I Stand on, London.

Brett, J. (2021). ‘The Bureaucratization of writing’, in Doing Politics: Writing on Public Life, Melbourne, pp. 233–246.

Broecker, W. S. (1987) Unpleasant surprises in the greenhouse?, Nature, 328, 123–126.
Unpleasant surprises in the greenhouse?Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Chan, G. (2021) Why You Should Give a F**k about Farming, Sydney.

Chase, S. (1936) Rich Land, Poor Land, York, PA.

Clarke, D., Baldwin, K., Baum, F., Godfrey, B., Richardson, S., and Robin, L. (2021) Australian Energy Transition Research Plan: Report for the Australian Council of Learned Academies (ACOLA), Melbourne. Available at https://acola.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/acola-2021-australian-energy-transition-plan.pdf [viewed December 2021]

Cockburn, S. (1943) Versatile bean of rich potential, Advertiser (Adelaide), 13 January.

Davis, D. K. (2016) The Arid Lands: History, Power, Knowledge, Boston.

Department of War Organisation and Industry (c. 1942) WOI What It Is and What It Does, Canberra.

Dyason, D. (1977) ‘After thirty years: history and philosophy of science in Australia 1946–1976’, in Melbourne Studies in Education, ed. S. Murray-Smith, Melbourne, pp. 45–74.

Dyason, D. (1984) William Gillbee and erysipelas at the Melbourne hospital: medical theory and social actions, Journal of Australian Studies, 14, 3–28.
William Gillbee and erysipelas at the Melbourne hospital: medical theory and social actionsCrossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Edney, M. H. (1997) Mapping an Empire: the Geographical Construction of British India, 1765–1843, Chicago.

Ghosh, A. (2019) Gun Island, London.

Gordon-Smith, E. (2019) Stop Being Reasonable, Sydney.

Griffiths, T. (2013) ‘Commentary: Wallace S. Broecker, “Unpleasant surprises in the greenhouse?” (1987) and J. R. Petit J. Jouzel, D. Raynaud, N. I. Barkov, J. M. Barnola, I. Basile, M. Bender, J. Chappellaz, M. David, G. Delaygue, V. M. Koylyakov, M. Legrand, V. Y. Lipenkov, C. Lorius, L. Pepin, C. Ritz, E. Saltzman and M. Stievenard, excerpts from “Climate and atmospheric history of the past 420,000 years from the Vostok Ice Core, Antarctica” (1999)’, in The Future of Nature: Documents of Global Change, eds L. Robin, S., Sörlin, and P. Warde, New Haven CT, pp. 337–362.

Heymann, M. (2020) Climate as resource and challenge: international cooperation in the UNESCO Arid Zone Programme, European Review of History: Revue européenne d’histoire, 27, 294–320.
Climate as resource and challenge: international cooperation in the UNESCO Arid Zone ProgrammeCrossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

KTH (2020) KTH Environmental Humanities Laboratory. Available at https://www.kth.se/philhist/historia/ehl [viewed December 2021]

Lee, K. E. (1997) A History of the CSIRO Division of Soils (1927–1997), Canberra. Available at https://publications.csiro.au/rpr/download?pid=legacy:853&dsid=DS1 [viewed November 2021]

Lowdermilk, W. C. (1953) ‘Conquest of the land through seven thousand years’, USDA report. Available at https://www.google.com.au/books/edition/Conquest_of_the_Land_Through_7_000_Years/LieVXG0ck9kC [viewed December 2021]

MacCallum, M. (2007) Dyason, Diana Joan (1919–1989), Australian Dictionary of Biography, 17, 347–348.

Maroske, S., Robin, L., and McCarthy, G. (2017) Building the history of Australian science: five projects of Professor R. W. Home (1980–present), Historical Records of Australian Science, 28, 1–11.
Building the history of Australian science: five projects of Professor R. W. Home (1980–present)Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Massy, C. (2017) The Call of the Reed Warbler: a New Agriculture a New Earth, St Lucia, Qld.

Mauser, W. (2014) ‘Global food futures’, Rachel Carson Center Seminar, LMU, Munich, 11 December. Available at https://www.carsoncenter.uni-muenchen.de/events_conf_seminars/event_history/2014-events/2014_lc/lc_mauser/index.html [viewed November 2021]

Morton, T. (2013) Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World, Minneapolis.

Morton, T. (2021) All Art Is Ecological, London.

Muir, C. (2014) The Broken Promise of Agricultural Progress, Abingdon, UK.

Nichols, W. T. (ed.) (1945) The Future of Science in Australia, Sydney.

Nowotny, H. (2015) ‘Social sciences and humanities in a global world’, in Thinking Ahead: Research, Funding and the Future, trans. & revised. J. Clare, eds J. Björkman and B. Fjæstad, Stockholm, pp. 225–234.

Petit, J. R., Jouzel, J., Reynaud, D., Barkov, N. I., Barnola, J. M., Basile, I., Bender, M., Chappellaz, J., David, M., Delaygue, G., Koylyakov, V. M., Legrand, M., Lipenkov, V. Y., Lorius, C., Pepin, L., Ritz, C., Saltzman, E., and Stievenard, M. (2013) ‘Climate and atmospheric history of the last 420,000 years from the Vostok Ice Core, Antarctica’ in The Future of Nature: Documents of Global Change, eds L. Robin, S. Sörlin, and P. Warde, New Haven CT.

Porter, J. R, Challinor, A. J., Henriksen, C. B., Howden, , Martre, S. P., and Smith, P. (2019) Invited review: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, agriculture, and food—a case of shifting cultivation and history, Global Change Biology, 25, 2518–2529.
Invited review: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, agriculture, and food—a case of shifting cultivation and historyCrossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 31095820PubMed |

Rivett, D. (1943) ‘Food, agriculture and government’, memorandum 1/11/1943 held in DWG MS 13586 State Library of Victoria, Box 59, Series 18, file 10.

Robin, L. (1991a) Building a Forest Conscience: an Historical Portrait of the Natural Resources Conservation League of Victoria, 1944–1990, Springvale.

Robin, L. (1991b) Notes of interview with Frank Gibbons, November 1991.

Robin, L. (1997) ‘Ecology: a science of empire?’, in Ecology and Empire: Environmental History of Settler Societies, eds T. Griffiths and L. Robin, Edinburgh, pp. 63–75.

Robin, L. (2007) How a Continent Created a Nation, Sydney.

Robin, L. (2013) ‘Comments on Paul Sears Deserts on the March (1935)’, in The Future of Nature: Documents of Global Change, eds L. Robin, S. Sörlin and P. Warde, New Haven CT, pp. 174–185.

Robin, L. (2020) ‘Comments on Selcer, The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment’, in H-Environment Roundtable Reviews, ed. K. M. Woodhouse, vol. 10, No. 11, pp. 5–9. https://networks.h-net.org/system/files/contributed-files/env-roundtable-10-11.pdf [viewed December 2020]

Robin, L. (2021) #ArtsforSurvival, Humanities Australia, 2021, 3–14. Available at https://humanities.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/HA12-ROBIN-D.03.pdf [Viewed December 2020]

Robin, L., and Day, M. (2017) Changing ideas about the environment in Australia: learning from Stockholm, Historical Records of Australian Science, 28, 37–49.
Changing ideas about the environment in Australia: learning from StockholmCrossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Robin, L., and Day, J. C. (2020) Maxwell Frank Cooper Day (1915–2017), Historical Records of Australian Science, 31, 39–53.
Maxwell Frank Cooper Day (1915–2017)Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Robin, L., Moore, J., Willoughby, S., and Maroske, S. (2011) ‘Aliens from the garden’, Proceedings of the State of Australian Cities Conference, Melbourne.

Robin, L., Sörlin, S., and Warde, P. (eds) (2013) The Future of Nature: Documents of Global Change, New Haven CT.

Rook, R. (2007) ‘The Eleventh Commandment’ and a Land of Promise: Walter Clay Lowdermilk and the Middle East, 1937–1944, Hays, KS. Available at https://scholars.fhsu.edu/fort_hays_studies_series/42 [viewed December 2021]

Rose, D. B. (1996) Nourishing Terrains: Australian Aboriginal Views of Landscape and Wilderness, Canberra.

Rose, D. B. (2004) Reports from a Wild Country: Ethics for Decolonisation, Sydney.

Scott, J. C. (1998) Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed, New Haven, CT.

Scott, J. C. (2017) Against the Grain: a Deep History of the Earliest States, New Haven, CT.

Sears, P. B. (1935) Deserts on the March, Norma, Oklahoma.

Selcer, P. (2018) The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment: How the United Nations Built Spaceship Earth, New York.

Sörlin, S. (2015) ‘Science advice—challenges pave the way for values and judgement’, in Thinking Ahead: Research, Funding and the Future, trans. & revised C. James, eds J. Björkman and B. Fjæstad, Stockholm, pp. 235–248.

Thompson, T. (1979).A Brief History of Soil Conservation in Victoria, 1834–1961, Melbourne.

Tucker, M. V. (1981) Dyason, Edward Clarence Evelyn (1886–1949), Australian Dictionary of Biography, 8, 391–392.

Uren, N. (2007) Downes, Ronald Geoffrey (Geoff) (1916–1985), Australian Dictionary of Biography, 17, 332–333.

Wadham, S. (1935) A Century of Progress in Victoria, Melbourne.

Wadham, S. M., and Wood, G. L. (1939) Land Utilization in Australia, Melbourne.

Warde, P., Robin, L., and Sörlin, S. (2018) The Environment: a History of the Idea, Baltimore.